# This file is part of beets.
# Copyright 2016
#
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
# a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
# "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
# without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
# distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
# permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
# the following conditions:
#
# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
# included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

"""Open metadata information in a text editor to let the user edit it."""

import codecs
import os
import shlex
import subprocess
from tempfile import NamedTemporaryFile

import yaml

from beets import plugins, ui, util
from beets.dbcore import types
from beets.importer import Action
from beets.ui.commands.utils import do_query
from beets.util import PromptChoice

# These "safe" types can avoid the format/parse cycle that most fields go
# through: they are safe to edit with native YAML types.
SAFE_TYPES = (types.BaseFloat, types.BaseInteger, types.Boolean)


class ParseError(Exception):
    """The modified file is unreadable. The user should be offered a chance to
    fix the error.
    """


def edit(filename, log):
    """Open `filename` in a text editor."""
    cmd = shlex.split(util.editor_command())
    cmd.append(filename)
    log.debug("invoking editor command: {!r}", cmd)
    try:
        subprocess.call(cmd)
    except OSError as exc:
        raise ui.UserError(f"could not run editor command {cmd[0]!r}: {exc}")


def dump(arg):
    """Dump a sequence of dictionaries as YAML for editing."""
    return yaml.safe_dump_all(
        arg,
        allow_unicode=True,
        default_flow_style=False,
    )


def load(s):
    """Read a sequence of YAML documents back to a list of dictionaries
    with string keys.

    Can raise a `ParseError`.
    """
    try:
        out = []
        for d in yaml.safe_load_all(s):
            if not isinstance(d, dict):
                raise ParseError(
                    f"each entry must be a dictionary; found {type(d).__name__}"
                )

            # Convert all keys to strings. They started out as strings,
            # but the user may have inadvertently messed this up.
            out.append({str(k): v for k, v in d.items()})

    except yaml.YAMLError as e:
        raise ParseError(f"invalid YAML: {e}")
    return out


def _safe_value(obj, key, value):
    """Check whether the `value` is safe to represent in YAML and trust as
    returned from parsed YAML.

    This ensures that values do not change their type when the user edits their
    YAML representation.
    """
    typ = obj._type(key)
    return isinstance(typ, SAFE_TYPES) and isinstance(value, typ.model_type)


def flatten(obj, fields):
    """Represent `obj`, a `dbcore.Model` object, as a dictionary for
    serialization. Only include the given `fields` if provided;
    otherwise, include everything.

    The resulting dictionary's keys are strings and the values are
    safely YAML-serializable types.
    """
    # Format each value.
    d = {}
    for key in obj.keys():
        value = obj[key]
        if _safe_value(obj, key, value):
            # A safe value that is faithfully representable in YAML.
            d[key] = value
        else:
            # A value that should be edited as a string.
            d[key] = obj.formatted()[key]

    # Possibly filter field names.
    if fields:
        return {k: v for k, v in d.items() if k in fields}
    else:
        return d


def apply_(obj, data):
    """Set the fields of a `dbcore.Model` object according to a
    dictionary.

    This is the opposite of `flatten`. The `data` dictionary should have
    strings as values.
    """
    for key, value in data.items():
        if _safe_value(obj, key, value):
            # A safe value *stayed* represented as a safe type. Assign it
            # directly.
            obj[key] = value
        else:
            # Either the field was stringified originally or the user changed
            # it from a safe type to an unsafe one. Parse it as a string.
            obj.set_parse(key, str(value))


class EditPlugin(plugins.BeetsPlugin):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__()

        self.config.add(
            {
                # The default fields to edit.
                "albumfields": "album albumartist",
                "itemfields": "track title artist album",
                # Silently ignore any changes to these fields.
                "ignore_fields": "id path",
            }
        )

        self.register_listener(
            "before_choose_candidate", self.before_choose_candidate_listener
        )

    def commands(self):
        edit_command = ui.Subcommand("edit", help="interactively edit metadata")
        edit_command.parser.add_option(
            "-f",
            "--field",
            metavar="FIELD",
            action="append",
            help="edit this field also",
        )
        edit_command.parser.add_option(
            "--all",
            action="store_true",
            dest="all",
            help="edit all fields",
        )
        edit_command.parser.add_album_option()
        edit_command.func = self._edit_command
        return [edit_command]

    def _edit_command(self, lib, opts, args):
        """The CLI command function for the `beet edit` command."""
        # Get the objects to edit.
        items, albums = do_query(lib, args, opts.album, False)
        objs = albums if opts.album else items
        if not objs:
            ui.print_("Nothing to edit.")
            return

        # Get the fields to edit.
        if opts.all:
            fields = None
        else:
            fields = self._get_fields(opts.album, opts.field)
        self.edit(opts.album, objs, fields)

    def _get_fields(self, album, extra):
        """Get the set of fields to edit."""
        # Start with the configured base fields.
        if album:
            fields = self.config["albumfields"].as_str_seq()
        else:
            fields = self.config["itemfields"].as_str_seq()

        # Add the requested extra fields.
        if extra:
            fields += extra

        # Ensure we always have the `id` field for identification.
        fields.append("id")

        return set(fields)

    def edit(self, album, objs, fields):
        """The core editor function.

        - `album`: A flag indicating whether we're editing Items or Albums.
        - `objs`: The `Item`s or `Album`s to edit.
        - `fields`: The set of field names to edit (or None to edit
          everything).
        """
        # Present the YAML to the user and let them change it.
        success = self.edit_objects(objs, fields)

        # Save the new data.
        if success:
            self.save_changes(objs)

    def edit_objects(self, objs, fields):
        """Dump a set of Model objects to a file as text, ask the user
        to edit it, and apply any changes to the objects.

        Return a boolean indicating whether the edit succeeded.
        """
        # Get the content to edit as raw data structures.
        old_data = [flatten(o, fields) for o in objs]

        # Set up a temporary file with the initial data for editing.
        new = NamedTemporaryFile(
            mode="w", suffix=".yaml", delete=False, encoding="utf-8"
        )
        old_str = dump(old_data)
        new.write(old_str)
        new.close()

        # Loop until we have parseable data and the user confirms.
        try:
            while True:
                # Ask the user to edit the data.
                edit(new.name, self._log)

                # Read the data back after editing and check whether anything
                # changed.
                with codecs.open(new.name, encoding="utf-8") as f:
                    new_str = f.read()
                if new_str == old_str:
                    ui.print_("No changes; aborting.")
                    return False

                # Parse the updated data.
                try:
                    new_data = load(new_str)
                except ParseError as e:
                    ui.print_(f"Could not read data: {e}")
                    if ui.input_yn("Edit again to fix? (Y/n)", True):
                        continue
                    else:
                        return False

                # Show the changes.
                # If the objects are not on the DB yet, we need a copy of their
                # original state for show_model_changes.
                objs_old = [obj.copy() if obj.id < 0 else None for obj in objs]
                self.apply_data(objs, old_data, new_data)
                changed = False
                for obj, obj_old in zip(objs, objs_old):
                    changed |= ui.show_model_changes(obj, obj_old)
                if not changed:
                    ui.print_("No changes to apply.")
                    return False

                # Confirm the changes.
                choice = ui.input_options(
                    ("continue Editing", "apply", "cancel")
                )
                if choice == "a":  # Apply.
                    return True
                elif choice == "c":  # Cancel.
                    return False
                elif choice == "e":  # Keep editing.
                    # Reset the temporary changes to the objects. I we have a
                    # copy from above, use that, else reload from the database.
                    objs = [
                        (old_obj or obj) for old_obj, obj in zip(objs_old, objs)
                    ]
                    for obj in objs:
                        if not obj.id < 0:
                            obj.load()
                    continue

        # Remove the temporary file before returning.
        finally:
            os.remove(new.name)

    def apply_data(self, objs, old_data, new_data):
        """Take potentially-updated data and apply it to a set of Model
        objects.

        The objects are not written back to the database, so the changes
        are temporary.
        """
        if len(old_data) != len(new_data):
            self._log.warning(
                "number of objects changed from {} to {}",
                len(old_data),
                len(new_data),
            )

        obj_by_id = {o.id: o for o in objs}
        ignore_fields = self.config["ignore_fields"].as_str_seq()
        for old_dict, new_dict in zip(old_data, new_data):
            # Prohibit any changes to forbidden fields to avoid
            # clobbering `id` and such by mistake.
            forbidden = False
            for key in ignore_fields:
                if old_dict.get(key) != new_dict.get(key):
                    self._log.warning("ignoring object whose {} changed", key)
                    forbidden = True
                    break
            if forbidden:
                continue

            id_ = int(old_dict["id"])
            apply_(obj_by_id[id_], new_dict)

    def save_changes(self, objs):
        """Save a list of updated Model objects to the database."""
        # Save to the database and possibly write tags.
        for ob in objs:
            if ob._dirty:
                self._log.debug("saving changes to {}", ob)
                ob.try_sync(ui.should_write(), ui.should_move())

    # Methods for interactive importer execution.

    def before_choose_candidate_listener(self, session, task):
        """Append an "Edit" choice and an "edit Candidates" choice (if
        there are candidates) to the interactive importer prompt.
        """
        choices = [PromptChoice("d", "eDit", self.importer_edit)]
        if task.candidates:
            choices.append(
                PromptChoice(
                    "c", "edit Candidates", self.importer_edit_candidate
                )
            )

        return choices

    def importer_edit(self, session, task):
        """Callback for invoking the functionality during an interactive
        import session on the *original* item tags.
        """
        # Assign negative temporary ids to Items that are not in the database
        # yet. By using negative values, no clash with items in the database
        # can occur.
        for i, obj in enumerate(task.items, start=1):
            # The importer may set the id to None when re-importing albums.
            if not obj._db or obj.id is None:
                obj.id = -i

        # Present the YAML to the user and let them change it.
        fields = self._get_fields(album=False, extra=[])
        success = self.edit_objects(task.items, fields)

        # Remove temporary ids.
        for obj in task.items:
            if obj.id < 0:
                obj.id = None

        # Save the new data.
        if success:
            # Return Action.RETAG, which makes the importer write the tags
            # to the files if needed without re-applying metadata.
            return Action.RETAG
        else:
            # Edit cancelled / no edits made. Revert changes.
            for obj in task.items:
                obj.read()

    def importer_edit_candidate(self, session, task):
        """Callback for invoking the functionality during an interactive
        import session on a *candidate*. The candidate's metadata is
        applied to the original items.
        """
        # Prompt the user for a candidate.
        sel = ui.input_options([], numrange=(1, len(task.candidates)))
        # Force applying the candidate on the items.
        task.match = task.candidates[sel - 1]
        task.apply_metadata()

        return self.importer_edit(session, task)
